06:01CounterCurrent Exchange | CounterCurrent Multipliers | LOH and Vasa Recta | Renal Physiology |Med Madness921views
03:14Temperature Regulation Of The Human Body | Physiology | Biology | FuseSchoolFuseSchool - Global Education825views
Multiple ChoiceWhich of the following is a description of a behavior that helps warm the body? 436views
Multiple ChoiceDuring a fever, the __________ readjusts the set point of the body to a __________ temperature. 513views
Multiple ChoiceIn the late fall, bats hibernate in clusters with many bats pressed together and holding on to one another. Which of the following statements does not represent an advantage of this behavior? 423views
Multiple ChoiceThe wolf, his coat glowing in the early spring sunshine, sat atop a cold boulder after unsuccessfully pursuing a plump jackrabbit. He continued to pant while __________. 479views
Multiple ChoiceIt is a cold day in the lecture hall. When you rest your arm on the cool laminated desktop at your seat, heat is transferred __________. 481views1rank
Textbook QuestionWhich of the following is not an adaptation for reducing the rate of heat loss to the environment? a. feathers or fur b. increasing blood flow to surface blood vessels c. huddling behavior of penguins d. countercurrent heat exchange684views
Textbook QuestionConsider three spheres with radii of 1 cm, 5 cm, and 10 cm. Calculate the surface area and the volume of each sphere, and plot the results on a graph with radius on the x-axis and surface area and volume on the y-axis. (Surface area of a sphere = 4πr2; volume of a sphere = (4/3)πr3.) Explain how the graph shows the relationship between size and surface area to volume ratio.438views
Textbook QuestionAfter a long, hot run together, your friend tells you that you should dunk your head into a cooler of water to lower your body temperature more rapidly, rather than sitting and waiting to cool down. What do you think? Form a hypothesis about how the ice-cold water might affect the rate at which your body temperature returns to normal. How could you test your hypothesis?464views
Textbook QuestionYou are in a room of empty chairs. As the chairs fill with people, you become hotter and hotter. A ceiling fan is turned on, and you feel cooler. You gained heat by _________ and lost heat to the environment by _________ . a. conduction … convection b. radiation … convection c. radiation … conduction d. convection … radiation440views
Textbook QuestionSome diuretics are on a list of substances that the International Olympic Committee has banned for use by athletes. What do diuretics do? Propose an explanation for how diuretic use could be an unfair advantage for a competitor in a sport like wrestling, in which weight classes are part of the competition.442views
Textbook QuestionYou are studying a large tropical reptile that has a high and relatively stable body temperature. How would you determine whether this animal is an endotherm or an ectotherm?437views
Textbook QuestionDolphins have an insulating layer of blubber that protects them from cold water, but their flippers are not insulated. Propose a hypothesis to explain why dolphin flippers do not freeze. Describe an experiment you could do to test your hypothesis. (You may assume you have equipment for measuring temperatures in dolphin flippers.) What results would you expect if your hypothesis is correct?516views
Textbook QuestionIn 1847, the German biologist Christian Bergmann noted that mammals and birds living at higher latitudes (farther from the equator) are on average larger and bulkier than related species living at lower latitudes. Suggest an evolutionary hypothesis to explain this observation.511views